‘Harvey’ got its director hooked on theater
- Share via
Tom Titus
Back in 1946 (or ‘47, he can’t remember exactly which), Charles
Nelson Reilly took a job as a teenage usher in a Hartford, Ct.,
theater where he saw his first play -- the post-Broadway tour of
“Harvey” with its original star, Frank Fay.
“That show inspired me,” he declared. “I wanted to do what they
did.”
Saturday, after a virtual lifetime in show business (he’s now 72),
Reilly will direct the opening production of the Laguna Playhouse’s
2003-04 season, Mary Chase’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play “Harvey,”
with a cast that’s priming the venerable comedy for a Broadway
revival.
“The show will be staged exactly as I saw it,” Reilly promised,
resisting any temptations to update the tender story of tippling
bachelor Elwood P. Dowd and his constant companion -- a six-foot-tall
invisible rabbit, the play’s title character. His Elwood will be the
noted screen and stage actor Charles Durning, with the brother-sister
team of Dick and Joyce Van Patten assuming the roles of Dr. Chumley
and Aunt Veta Louise Simmons.
Reilly is no stranger to the Playhouse. He’s brought Julie Harris
to the Laguna theater on two occasions, directing her in her Tony
Award-winning one-woman drama “The Belle of Amherst.” And he’s taken
the stage for his one-man show, “Save It for the Stage: The Life of
Reilly,” on two other occasions. He also earned a Tony nomination for
his direction of Harris in the 1997 revival of “The Gin Game.”
As an actor, Reilly earned a Tony nomination as best featured
actor in a musical for his role opposite Carol Channing in the
original “Hello, Dolly” in 1964. He got the Tony Award for best
featured actor in a musical for his performance as Bud Frump in “How
To Succeed In Business Without Really Trying” in 1962.
Reilly not only acts and directs, he’s spent years as a teacher at
the HB Studio, the acting studio created by Herbert Berghof and his
wife, Uta Hagen (the original star of “Who’s Afraid of Virginia
Woolf?” He’s also an acting coach at the Burt Reynolds Dinner Theatre
in Jupiter, Fla., and he has directed many Broadway and off-Broadway
shows.
Television audiences will remember Reilly as a longtime panelist
on “Match Game,” hosted by his pal, Gene Rayburn, whom he met when he
understudied Rayburn in the original production of “Bye Bye, Birdie.”
During the show’s heyday in the 1970s, Reilly was beloved for his
goofy wisecracks, flowery ascots, and barbed exchanges with fellow
panelist Brett Somers.
The original production of “Harvey” opened Nov. 1, 1944, under the
direction of Antoinette Perry. For those unfamiliar with that name,
she was the lady they named the Tony awards after. The show closed in
January of 1949 and became a movie in 1950 with a memorable
performance by James Stewart as Elwood.
Harvey played himself, as he’ll do once again in Laguna.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Coastline Pilot.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.